Today I learned that there is an AI data center being built in the Indian city of Raipur, where I used to live.

Raipur is very hot (Wikipidia says the record high is 47.9C), and I'm pretty sure that doesn't take the effect of humidity into account. It wasn't always this hot, but it gets a little worse each year and that has added up.

The majority of the city's electricity is sourced from coal power plants, and for a variety of reasons its grid is not especially stable, with particularly frequent blackouts during the rainy season. That often means that there's no AC during the most humid and second-hottest time of the year.

It is dry year-round except for those few months of monsoons, when the local groundwater reserves are replenished. Despite the intensity of those storms, there have been progressively worse water shortages every year. I've done a lot of rooftop gardening there to reduce the urban heat island effect, and I've watched all but the most heat and drought-resistant plants wither and die. At times water was being brought in by tanker trucks and there just wasn't enough for both human use and the whole garden.

I find it difficult to imagine a worse place to build an AI data center, and yet here we are. They are going to burn coal to power the AI chips and cooling rigs during heat waves and water shortages that are already literally deadly to the people living there.

This is the sort of thing people are justifying when they talk about how much more productive they are thanks to their spicy corporate autocomplete. The anger that I feel is not some abstract moral high ground, but a visceral reaction to having gone outside in deadly climate conditions to spread an insufficient amount of water on my dying plants.

When they say that AI is the future, this is what that actually means.

RackBank Launches India’s First AI DataCenter Park in Raipur

Get future-ready with RackBank’s AI DataCenter Park in Raipur with 100,000+ GPUs, 80MW capacity, green energy & digital growth. Powering AI startups, enterprises & India’s tech innovation.

In its push to become Big Tech’s data center hub, India is overlooking local resistance

Google and Microsoft’s multibillion-dollar projects under construction in India are facing backlash from farmers, while the government offers huge tax relief to foreign companies setting up data centers.

Rest of World
@CorioPsicologia oh, that's fantastic! thanks for sharing!
@ansuz I know her because she interview me as @tunubesecamirio

@CorioPsicologia @tunubesecamirio the article doesn't mention the Raipur datacenter explicitly, but from what I understand the other sites in India are not so different.

I heard about the Visakhapatnam data center announced by Google from a friend who visited the area. Apparently the local AI bros are very happy that computers are going to be replacing unproductive land uses like farming 🙄

From what I understand the locals already had similar problems with electricity outages.

“It’s the same problem in all the world because there are the five same companies in all the world,” Gómez told Rest of World. “So the devil has the same faces for us.”

Thanks for putting this so well.

Our First AI Hub in India, Powered by a $15 Billion Investment

The multi-faceted investment in Visakhapatnam will deploy cutting-edge infrastructure, establish a new international subsea gateway, and deliver gigawatt-scale compute to power services globally.

Google

@CorioPsicologia @ansuz

Thanks for sharing this and truly love the name of your org so much (Your Cloud Dries My River)

Vizag is a coastal city that, when i was in school, known for having fruit juice shops at every nook & corner (when other cities were getting onto sodas & colas trend post liberalisaton of indian economy)

It is also our eastern naval command. And also where i first saw dolphins at sunrise.

And now apparently anointed to host data centers. Who would have dreamed of that.